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    The trucker convoy shows how Canadians are being sucked into larger conspiratorial na

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-the-trucker-convoy-shows-how-canadians-are-being-sucked-into-larger/

    opinion
    The trucker convoy shows how Canadians are being sucked into larger conspiratorial narratives
    Daniel Panneton
    Special to The Globe and Mail
    Published Yesterday

    Daniel Panneton is a writer, educator and online hate researcher based in Toronto.

    In their 2021 book You Are Here: A Field Guide for Navigating Polarized Speech, Conspiracy Theories, and Our Polluted Media Landscape, scholars Whitney Phillips and Ryan M. Milner use hurricanes as a metaphor to explain an important dynamic of the QAnon meta-conspiracy theory.

    Similar to how a hurricane can grow by consuming smaller storms, QAnon absorbed and rerouted existing conspiratorial narratives around Pizzagate and the murder of Democratic National Committee employee Seth Rich. Although each narrative was destructive in its own right, their absorption into a larger “storm” produced more devastating results than they would have alone. The power of a hurricane depends in part on the shape of the landscape that it hits, and in QAnon’s case, the COVID-19 pandemic helped shape an environment particularly vulnerable to radicalization and social fragmentation.

    The United States is not the only country where the pandemic has frayed the shared sense of community and reality; Canadians are similarly vulnerable to radicalization. As with QAnon, the recent Freedom Convoy to Ottawa demonstrates how existing economic and political concerns are converging around and being sucked into larger conspiratorial narratives. Nominally protesting against vaccine mandates, the Freedom Convoy represented a medley of real, imagined and exaggerated issues bound together by a common sense of alienation and grievance. It created a context in which mainstream and fringe concerns could meld, merge and reinforce each other, and where extreme symbols and rhetoric could be normalized by association and adjacency with legitimate issues.

    Marked by threats against journalists and lawmakers, the Freedom Convoy included a motley array of Western separatists, anti-vaxxers, conspiracy theorists, antisemites, Islamophobes and other extremists. This wasn’t a surprise to anyone who’d been paying attention: Several of the convoy organizers have a history of white nationalist and racist activism, a fact that extremism experts such as the Canadian Anti-Hate Network emphasized repeatedly prior to the convoy’s arrival in Ottawa.

    The Freedom Convoy was organized largely online, and within relevant Facebook groups there is meme after meme articulating the idea that Canada is suffering under a tyrannical government. The memes are evocative of a similar “Canada is collapsing” narrative that has existed for several years on the infamous 4chan, a fringe website whose cultural and political impact outweighs its relative size, and which often functions as a workshop and crucible for extremist propagandizing.

    Since early 2018 there have been regular threads posted on the site’s “Politically Incorrect” board promoting the accelerationist narrative aimed at undermining trust in existing institutions in service of societal collapse. Threads follow a similar sequence: The original poster shares images of astronomical food prices from fly-in communities or high-end grocery stores, often with comparisons to prices in other countries. Many of these images are made into memes with text such as, “Canada under Trudeau.” In response, other users post photographs of in-store prices from their own local stores to disprove the disinformation, often – in typical online absurdist fashion – alongside memes. Accusations and speculation about who is posting the fake information fly freely until people lose interest and move on to other threads. Rinse and repeat every few weeks. Repetition is key to normalization, and while a single grocery meme won’t radicalize, it can contribute to a growing perception that drastic, even violent measures may be called for.

    The threads have developed two functions: Spread the narrative that a collapse is imminent and promote conspiratorial speculation over who is to blame for it. Despite how often these misleading posts are disproven, such disinformation threads have been a consistent presence on 4chan for several years. They are common enough that users developed antisemitic conspiracy theories about their origins, claiming that propagandists were spreading lies to distract from imagined Jewish political machinations in Canada. The antisemitic conspiracies were then met with further antisemitism: Users posting accurate prices were accused of being part of the (made-up) Canadian Grocery Defense Force, a reference to the (very real) Jewish Internet Defense Force, implying yet again Jewish control.

    There is an inherent risk in writing about hateful disinformation in a mainstream publication as it can amplify corrosive accelerationist narratives. However, when we look at existing discourse around food prices and inflation in Canada, we find that elements of the “Canada is collapsing” theory were already being normalized in the leadup to the Freedom Convoy.

    In December, we saw a mainstream iteration of the meme on Reddit, which received a write up in the Toronto Star: A person posted a sparse grocery haul with the caption, “This was $95.″ As with the debunking on 4chan threads, users quickly pointed out that the total had been inflated by relatively expensive items and an undisclosed delivery fee.

    Elected officials have also posted similar content. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney recently tweeted photographs of empty shelves and described the situation as a crisis – a move that a distribution expert said weaponized the unrepresentative images.

    Although none of these examples have the same explicitly accelerationist intent as the material on 4chan, they reinforce a radicalizing narrative that is already prevalent in darker corners of the web and being normalized with troubling speed. The fact that these grievances appeared alongside other more extreme symbols at the convoy is cause for concern. The “Canada is collapsing” narrative has bled into the mainstream, and events such as the Freedom Convoy provide environments in which it can flourish among other conspiratorial and accelerationist theories.

    Rising food costs and supply chain issues were among the legitimate issues highlighted during the protests, but panic-shopping in the early days of the pandemic demonstrated how the prospect of empty shelves can easily induce irrational behaviour. Already, right-wing extremist activity has surged and increasing numbers of Canadians are thinking conspiratorially. Trust in institutions is failing, and it’s vital that journalists and particularly lawmakers recognize how extremists can opportunistically redefine and hijack existing issues, and hold their peers accountable when they amplify or normalize accelerationist narratives. Failure to do so, or worse, attempting to harness and manipulate them for political gain, will only pull Canada deeper into our present quagmire.

    #2
    Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-the-trucker-convoy-shows-how-canadians-are-being-sucked-into-larger/

    opinion
    The trucker convoy shows how Canadians are being sucked into larger conspiratorial narratives
    Daniel Panneton
    Special to The Globe and Mail
    Published Yesterday

    Daniel Panneton is a writer, educator and online hate researcher based in Toronto.

    In their 2021 book You Are Here: A Field Guide for Navigating Polarized Speech, Conspiracy Theories, and Our Polluted Media Landscape, scholars Whitney Phillips and Ryan M. Milner use hurricanes as a metaphor to explain an important dynamic of the QAnon meta-conspiracy theory.

    Similar to how a hurricane can grow by consuming smaller storms, QAnon absorbed and rerouted existing conspiratorial narratives around Pizzagate and the murder of Democratic National Committee employee Seth Rich. Although each narrative was destructive in its own right, their absorption into a larger “storm” produced more devastating results than they would have alone. The power of a hurricane depends in part on the shape of the landscape that it hits, and in QAnon’s case, the COVID-19 pandemic helped shape an environment particularly vulnerable to radicalization and social fragmentation.

    The United States is not the only country where the pandemic has frayed the shared sense of community and reality; Canadians are similarly vulnerable to radicalization. As with QAnon, the recent Freedom Convoy to Ottawa demonstrates how existing economic and political concerns are converging around and being sucked into larger conspiratorial narratives. Nominally protesting against vaccine mandates, the Freedom Convoy represented a medley of real, imagined and exaggerated issues bound together by a common sense of alienation and grievance. It created a context in which mainstream and fringe concerns could meld, merge and reinforce each other, and where extreme symbols and rhetoric could be normalized by association and adjacency with legitimate issues.

    Marked by threats against journalists and lawmakers, the Freedom Convoy included a motley array of Western separatists, anti-vaxxers, conspiracy theorists, antisemites, Islamophobes and other extremists. This wasn’t a surprise to anyone who’d been paying attention: Several of the convoy organizers have a history of white nationalist and racist activism, a fact that extremism experts such as the Canadian Anti-Hate Network emphasized repeatedly prior to the convoy’s arrival in Ottawa.

    The Freedom Convoy was organized largely online, and within relevant Facebook groups there is meme after meme articulating the idea that Canada is suffering under a tyrannical government. The memes are evocative of a similar “Canada is collapsing” narrative that has existed for several years on the infamous 4chan, a fringe website whose cultural and political impact outweighs its relative size, and which often functions as a workshop and crucible for extremist propagandizing.

    Since early 2018 there have been regular threads posted on the site’s “Politically Incorrect” board promoting the accelerationist narrative aimed at undermining trust in existing institutions in service of societal collapse. Threads follow a similar sequence: The original poster shares images of astronomical food prices from fly-in communities or high-end grocery stores, often with comparisons to prices in other countries. Many of these images are made into memes with text such as, “Canada under Trudeau.” In response, other users post photographs of in-store prices from their own local stores to disprove the disinformation, often – in typical online absurdist fashion – alongside memes. Accusations and speculation about who is posting the fake information fly freely until people lose interest and move on to other threads. Rinse and repeat every few weeks. Repetition is key to normalization, and while a single grocery meme won’t radicalize, it can contribute to a growing perception that drastic, even violent measures may be called for.

    The threads have developed two functions: Spread the narrative that a collapse is imminent and promote conspiratorial speculation over who is to blame for it. Despite how often these misleading posts are disproven, such disinformation threads have been a consistent presence on 4chan for several years. They are common enough that users developed antisemitic conspiracy theories about their origins, claiming that propagandists were spreading lies to distract from imagined Jewish political machinations in Canada. The antisemitic conspiracies were then met with further antisemitism: Users posting accurate prices were accused of being part of the (made-up) Canadian Grocery Defense Force, a reference to the (very real) Jewish Internet Defense Force, implying yet again Jewish control.

    There is an inherent risk in writing about hateful disinformation in a mainstream publication as it can amplify corrosive accelerationist narratives. However, when we look at existing discourse around food prices and inflation in Canada, we find that elements of the “Canada is collapsing” theory were already being normalized in the leadup to the Freedom Convoy.

    In December, we saw a mainstream iteration of the meme on Reddit, which received a write up in the Toronto Star: A person posted a sparse grocery haul with the caption, “This was $95.″ As with the debunking on 4chan threads, users quickly pointed out that the total had been inflated by relatively expensive items and an undisclosed delivery fee.

    Elected officials have also posted similar content. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney recently tweeted photographs of empty shelves and described the situation as a crisis – a move that a distribution expert said weaponized the unrepresentative images.

    Although none of these examples have the same explicitly accelerationist intent as the material on 4chan, they reinforce a radicalizing narrative that is already prevalent in darker corners of the web and being normalized with troubling speed. The fact that these grievances appeared alongside other more extreme symbols at the convoy is cause for concern. The “Canada is collapsing” narrative has bled into the mainstream, and events such as the Freedom Convoy provide environments in which it can flourish among other conspiratorial and accelerationist theories.

    Rising food costs and supply chain issues were among the legitimate issues highlighted during the protests, but panic-shopping in the early days of the pandemic demonstrated how the prospect of empty shelves can easily induce irrational behaviour. Already, right-wing extremist activity has surged and increasing numbers of Canadians are thinking conspiratorially. Trust in institutions is failing, and it’s vital that journalists and particularly lawmakers recognize how extremists can opportunistically redefine and hijack existing issues, and hold their peers accountable when they amplify or normalize accelerationist narratives. Failure to do so, or worse, attempting to harness and manipulate them for political gain, will only pull Canada deeper into our present quagmire.
    Toothpaste is already out of the tube. I would agree with this article but judging by some of the coercive tactics the government has used and bs they that was covered up in the past you really can’t trust anything. Conspiracy theories or the official government/media narrative.

    I’ll give you a conspiracy that was true. Days of the Heritage Front. Neo Nazi hate group led by Wolfgang Droge was infiltrated by a csis operative. He managed to work up to a position of influence. Anyway, a heritage front meeting happened to be going on in proximity to a reform party convention. How that ended up probably had something to do with the csis mole. Same csis mole was the one who instigated the heritage front should March over to the reform party convention and join the party. Put Manning in a position. The government of the time was afraid of the reform movement and they used the convenience of having infiltrated the nazis to silence opposition. So no Chuck I don’t trust everything.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by WiltonRanch View Post
      Toothpaste is already out of the tube. I would agree with this article but judging by some of the coercive tactics the government has used and bs they that was covered up in the past you really can’t trust anything. Conspiracy theories or the official government/media narrative.

      I’ll give you a conspiracy that was true. Days of the Heritage Front. Neo Nazi hate group led by Wolfgang Droge was infiltrated by a csis operative. He managed to work up to a position of influence. Anyway, a heritage front meeting happened to be going on in proximity to a reform party convention. How that ended up probably had something to do with the csis mole. Same csis mole was the one who instigated the heritage front should March over to the reform party convention and join the party. Put Manning in a position. The government of the time was afraid of the reform movement and they used the convenience of having infiltrated the nazis to silence opposition. So no Chuck I don’t trust everything.
      So why would you trust conspiracy theories spread on this site without proof? Posters with alias are a real source of the truth. We can only judge by actions such as causing untold harm to the nation by shutting down international commerce. To what end ? Screwing over millions of hard working Canadians for the anger and hate of a minority? For all their protestations of freedom they are depriving millions of their freedom to earn a living. There is nothing in the Bill of Rights that gives them that right.

      Comment


        #4
        where were you when they were ramming greta down our throats and telling us we didn't need oil anymore to create this massive shortage thats here

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
          So why would you trust conspiracy theories spread on this site without proof? Posters with alias are a real source of the truth. We can only judge by actions such as causing untold harm to the nation by shutting down international commerce. To what end ? Screwing over millions of hard working Canadians for the anger and hate of a minority? For all their protestations of freedom they are depriving millions of their freedom to earn a living. There is nothing in the Bill of Rights that gives them that right.
          Who said I believed every conspiracy theory I read here or elsewhere. Funny though how some conspiracy theories have a thread of truth which comes to light like every cbc story has a bit of bs in them. I’ve been around some of biggest bullshitters all my life and can dish it out too. Takes one to know one. But like I said before stare into the abyss long enough and it stares back into you.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by WiltonRanch View Post
            Who said I believed every conspiracy theory I read here or elsewhere. Funny though how some conspiracy theories have a thread of truth which comes to light like every cbc story has a bit of bs in them. I’ve been around some of biggest bullshitters all my life and can dish it out too. Takes one to know one. But like I said before stare into the abyss long enough and it stares back into you.
            Chuckles... your narrative is about as convincing as the truth about the power of the CWB Monopoly .

            Faulty logic ... x2.

            Cheers

            Comment


              #7
              This is what our Prime Minister said yesterday;

              "We've heard you, it's time to go home now,” he said, adding particularly if they have children with them, or risk facing “severe” legal consequences. “We are very hopeful that people will choose to leave these protests peacefully.”

              Has he been saying " If you don't do as I tell you we are coming for your family?"

              Wonder who he has advising him on tactics?

              A few on here are in full agreement. As there always are in the dark days in history.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
                Chuckles... your narrative is about as convincing as the truth about the power of the CWB Monopoly .

                Faulty logic ... x2.

                Cheers
                You just can't let it go , because you know you screwed us over with your destruction of the Cwb.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Klaus Schwab...WEF

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
                    This is what our Prime Minister said yesterday;

                    "We've heard you, it's time to go home now,” he said, adding particularly if they have children with them, or risk facing “severe” legal consequences. “We are very hopeful that people will choose to leave these protests peacefully.”

                    Has he been saying " If you don't do as I tell you we are coming for your family?"

                    Wonder who he has advising him on tactics?

                    A few on here are in full agreement. As there always are in the dark days in history.
                    Butts would be my guess.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                      You just can't let it go , because you know you screwed us over with your destruction of the Cwb.
                      I call a truce here. Lol. Board is gone let’s forget about it. Goes for both sides. It was a hatchet job removing it and stuff could’ve been done better but damnit this sounds like my old family members pigeon holing Germans in this country for 100 years as untrustworthy because of two world wars which ended 75 years ago. Move the fork on!!! Both of you

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                        You just can't let it go , because you know you screwed us over with your destruction of the Cwb.
                        Haha Aggie’s true agenda. Same as chucks. What u never learned to pick up the phone to sell ur crop.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by agstar77 View Post
                          You just can't let it go , because you know you screwed us over with your destruction of the Cwb.
                          Omg…..yes farmland prices increasing 300%….net farm income doubling since the demise of the CWB has been a real travesty for my farm and many others. Go back to your hole and save the BS. Freedom is such a Bitch for you pro tyranny leftist.!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by Crestliner View Post
                            Omg…..yes farmland prices increasing 300%….net farm income doubling since the demise of the CWB has been a real travesty for my farm and many others. Go back to your hole and save the BS. Freedom is such a Bitch for you pro tyranny leftist.!
                            You would not recognize freedom if it smacked you in the face.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Have to admit I didn’t read the cut and paste. My only thought is the Federal government first smeared the protest before it arrived. Then they ignored it hoping it would go away. To say Justin Trudeau has handled this protest badly is the understatement of the century. The fire under the protesters was lit by a stupid trucker vaccine mandate. And after the fire was lit they tried to put it out with gasoline, hard to believe!

                              Comment

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